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by CUNA Advocacy

Earlier this week, CUNA called on the U.S. Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals to affirm the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Ohio’s dismissal of the TCPA lawsuit in light of the Supreme Court’s decision in Barr v. American Association of Political Consultants, Inc. in July 2020. Credit unions suffer unequal treatment for having made important and welcome calls to members under the Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA), CUNA said in an amicus brief filed Wednesday in Lindenbaum v. Realgy, LLC. 

In that case the Supreme Court found that a 2015 amendment to the TCPA was unconstitutional and eliminated the addition going forward. However, credit union calls made between the 2015 amendment and the 2020 decision were still subject to unequal treatment under the TCPA during that time.

“Credit unions communicate with their members on a wide range of matters such as financial relief during times of emergency, information enabling participation in governance, financial education, status of loan payments, and fraud alerts. Members expect and welcome these informational communications. But under Plaintiff’s interpretation of the TCPA, a credit union that makes calls to collect private loans would face potentially crippling liability, whereas a company that calls to collect federally guaranteed loans would be exempt—a classic case of unequal treatment.”

The brief goes on to note that, despite good-faith compliance efforts, credit unions limit important communication to members because of “ubiquitous and costly” TCPA litigation. CUNA’s research also shows there is no questions the TCPA chills credit unions’ communications with their members.

“More than three-fourths (76%) of credit unions responding to a CUNA survey reported that it is ‘very difficult’ (30%) or ‘somewhat difficult’ (46%) to determine whether their communications are compliant with the TCPA,” the brief reads. “The same survey found that 35% of credit unions curtailed or stopped texting their members… As a result, important notifications are delayed or not made at all. Instead of being protected, consumers are being harmed by not timely receiving notifications—such as debt payment relief options following natural disasters or late payment notices.”

CUNA filed a similar brief with the U.S. Supreme Court last year in Facebook Inc., v. Duguid, urging the court to restore an appropriate balance between protecting consumers and not unduly burdening credit unions’ ability to communicate with their members.